ABSTRACT

Based on fine-grained ethnographic research in an English city, this book offers a highly original perspective on England’s contemporary political predicament. It argues that some of the most influential academic accounts of the country's current political situation, particularly those focusing on culture or racism, have neglected the key role of nationalism as an often unspoken, banal political principle and framing ideology. Suggesting that economic inequalities remain the key causal ingredient of English political life and, crucially, that these are being interpreted by individuals in relation to a nationalist/cosmopolitan ideological axis, the author argues that any effective, progressive political future will require a reinvigorated sense of political community. Proposing a politics that will promote both nationhood and cosmopolitanism, Nationalism, Inequality and England’s Political Predicament advocates a seemingly contradictory but necessary approach by which explicitly anti-nationalist and anti-racist principles coexist expediently alongside short-term protectionist and immigration control policies.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Explaining England’s political predicament

chapter 1|32 pages

Contemporary nationalist politics in England

Inequalities, culture and racism

chapter 3|14 pages

Feeling overlooked

Economic precariousness and political outlooks

chapter 4|23 pages

Nationalist politics among the overlooked

chapter 5|23 pages

Affluence, politics and place

chapter 7|17 pages

Conclusion

Nationhood, cosmopolitanism and England’s political future